Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "— Albert"


6 mentions found


The Office Ties That Bind
  + stars: | 2024-08-04 | by ( Anna Holmes | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Send questions about the office, money, careers and work-life balance to workfriend@nytimes.com. A Question of LoyaltyI work for a smallish company (fewer than 100 corporate employees with and 1,500 field workers). I enjoy my job, the challenge, my co-workers and the good work-life balance. — AlbertMy first question for you: How much do you want a new job versus thinking you should want a new job? It sure sounds that you’re in an enviable, if not ideal, position: You enjoy your job, your colleagues, and the work-life balance that your job affords.
Persons: I’ve, I’m, — Albert
But the tech powering it has limitations and may struggle to make AI that is as smart as humans. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. This means the public gets to see research faster, but it isn't necessarily reliable. AdvertisementHe gave "kudos" to Dao and Gu "for pushing on alternative sequence architectures for many years now." ChatGPT was a landmark cultural event that sparked an AI boom.
Persons: ChatGPT, , Bill Gates, abut, Albert Gu, we've, vXumZqJsdb — Albert Gu, Gu, Dao, JAX, Jim Fan Organizations: Service, Google, Carnegie Mellon, Tri Dao, SSM, Nvidia Locations: AGI, Tri, pretraining
In the Middle of a War With No End in Sight
  + stars: | 2023-11-21 | by ( Caroline Alexander | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
NOVEMBER 1942: An Intimate History of the Turning Point of World War II, by Peter Englund. Translated by Peter Graves. “This is a book about November 1942,” the Swedish economist and historian Peter Englund explains in his introductory note to the reader, “the month that marked the turning point of the Second World War.” November 1942 was the month that brought the Allies hard-fought victories in North Africa and inspired Churchill to say that the war had reached “the end of the beginning.”Englund’s approach to the subject is more or less the same as it was when, more than a decade ago, he used the diaries and memoirs of people who lived and survived during an earlier conflict to compose his acclaimed account, “The Beauty and the Sorrow: An Intimate History of the First World War.”“If you are wondering what I’ve added,” Englund writes, somewhat sternly, of his new book, “the answer is: nothing.” Apart from footnotes, then, all information — every detail of every day — is drawn from these records of personal experience. An “intimate history” does “not attempt to describe what the war was during these four critical weeks,” he explains, “but will try to say something about how it was.”Some of the 39 writers he has selected are well-known figures — Albert Camus; the Soviet journalist Vasily Grossman; the Australian surgeon captured by Japanese forces, Edward “Weary” Dunlop; the English pacifist and nurse Vera Brittain; the British war poet and tank driver Keith Douglas — but most are relatively obscure.
Persons: Peter Englund, Peter Graves, Churchill, , ” Englund, , — Albert Camus, Vasily Grossman, Edward “ Weary ” Dunlop, Vera Brittain, Keith Douglas — Locations: Swedish, North Africa, Soviet
WHY WE’RE HEREWe’re exploring how America defines itself one place at a time. In Northern California, prospectors are looking to strike gold after the winter storms, recalling a storied era in state history. April 22, 2023PLACERVILLE, Calif. — Albert Fausel spends his days at the family hardware store sorting through boxes of bolts and pacing the old, creaking floorboards to greet his loyal clientele. But on a recent sunny afternoon, he threw on his wet suit and diver’s mask and inserted himself face down in the shallow creek near his home. In just 20 minutes of rooting around the creek bed, Mr. Fausel had found about $100 worth of gold.
2022: The Year in Visual Stories and Graphics
  + stars: | 2022-12-28 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
How America Lost One Million People How America Lost One Million People “After working on stories for so many Covid milestones as each 100,000 deaths passed, we knew we had to do something really special to commemorate the one million people who passed away from Covid. Deaths from Covid had begun to feel like just a grimly increasing number without connection to the individuals who were dying. By showing every death as a single dot, we hoped to convey that every death was an important individual tragedy. But as a whole, the losses had affected every part of America and every part of American society. By arranging the dots into data visualizations, we hoped to show that these losses had not affected all parts of the country equally and there were important patterns in who had died.” — Albert Sun
(video) Și iarăși The Simpsons. Animația, într-un episod din 2012, a prezis victoria lui Joe Biden la alegerile din acest anThe Simpsons au prezis, din nou, rezultatele alegerilor din SUA. Amintim că The Simpsons este cunoscut pentru prezicerile pe care le face. În serialul animat s-au făcut preziceri precum 11 septembrie 2001, victoria lui Obama și a lui Trump, chiar și discursul Gretei Thunberg, înainte cu 10 ani ca acesta să aibă loc. Iar acest video era pe internet și se presupunea că face o prezicere și la alegerile prezidențiale din 2016, când a câștigat Donald Trump.
Persons: Joe Biden, Mr . Burns, Charles Montgomery, Monty, Burns, Harry Shearer, Christopher Collins . Burns, Homer Simpson, Obama, Trump, albert Locations: Simpsons, The, SUA, Statele Unite, Springfield, simpsons
Total: 6